Evaluation of sleep and treatment discipline in people with epilepsy

ntroduction. Antiepileptic drugs are effective in treating epilepsy and about 70% of people with epilepsy can be seizure-free; however, undisciplined use of antiepileptic drugs is a major cause of treatment failure. The aim of the study. To study the discipline of sleep and treatment regimen in peo...

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Main Authors: D. Streckytė, R. Mameniškienė
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Vilnius University Press 2020-12-01
Series:Neurologijos seminarai
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.journals.vu.lt/neurologijos_seminarai/article/view/27712
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author D. Streckytė
R. Mameniškienė
author_facet D. Streckytė
R. Mameniškienė
author_sort D. Streckytė
collection DOAJ
description ntroduction. Antiepileptic drugs are effective in treating epilepsy and about 70% of people with epilepsy can be seizure-free; however, undisciplined use of antiepileptic drugs is a major cause of treatment failure. The aim of the study. To study the discipline of sleep and treatment regimen in people with different types of epilepsy and evaluate their determinants. Methods. A cross-sectional questionnaire-based study of adults with epilepsy who received antiepileptic treatment. Statistical analysis was performed using MS Excel and SPSS 21.0 pro- grams. Statistical significance was defined with a p<0.05. Results. The study included 100 participants, 65% had focal epilepsy and 55% were women. The median age was 37.5±15.7, mean epilepsy duration – 9.5±11, mean age of epilepsy onset – 21.5±17 years. It was found that 30% of participants did not adhere to their treatment regardless of epilepsy type (p=0.819). Nonadherence was associated with living in a rural area (p=0.032), frequent seizures (p=0.033), and less frequent medication dosing (p=0.032), especially in generalized epilepsy group (p=0.019). Sleep regimen did not depend on epilepsy type (p>0.05), 35% of respondents slept less than 7 hours per night, and 53% did not follow sleep regimen, which was related to treatment indiscipline (p=0.027). Conclusions. Nonadherence to the antiepileptic drugs is common among people with epilepsy. The most common subjective reason is forgetfulness, while objective reasons are living in a rural area, frequent seizures, and less frequent dosage of the antiepileptic drug. More than half of people with epilepsy do not follow a regular sleep regimen and tend to disregard treatment regimen.
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spelling doaj-art-64a2ac0ea43d4b57a0b1e37d444f43842025-01-20T18:22:34ZengVilnius University PressNeurologijos seminarai1392-30642424-59172020-12-01244(86)10.29014/ns.2020.41Evaluation of sleep and treatment discipline in people with epilepsyD. Streckytė 0R. Mameniškienė1Vilnius University, LithuaniaVilnius University, Lithuania ntroduction. Antiepileptic drugs are effective in treating epilepsy and about 70% of people with epilepsy can be seizure-free; however, undisciplined use of antiepileptic drugs is a major cause of treatment failure. The aim of the study. To study the discipline of sleep and treatment regimen in people with different types of epilepsy and evaluate their determinants. Methods. A cross-sectional questionnaire-based study of adults with epilepsy who received antiepileptic treatment. Statistical analysis was performed using MS Excel and SPSS 21.0 pro- grams. Statistical significance was defined with a p<0.05. Results. The study included 100 participants, 65% had focal epilepsy and 55% were women. The median age was 37.5±15.7, mean epilepsy duration – 9.5±11, mean age of epilepsy onset – 21.5±17 years. It was found that 30% of participants did not adhere to their treatment regardless of epilepsy type (p=0.819). Nonadherence was associated with living in a rural area (p=0.032), frequent seizures (p=0.033), and less frequent medication dosing (p=0.032), especially in generalized epilepsy group (p=0.019). Sleep regimen did not depend on epilepsy type (p>0.05), 35% of respondents slept less than 7 hours per night, and 53% did not follow sleep regimen, which was related to treatment indiscipline (p=0.027). Conclusions. Nonadherence to the antiepileptic drugs is common among people with epilepsy. The most common subjective reason is forgetfulness, while objective reasons are living in a rural area, frequent seizures, and less frequent dosage of the antiepileptic drug. More than half of people with epilepsy do not follow a regular sleep regimen and tend to disregard treatment regimen. https://www.journals.vu.lt/neurologijos_seminarai/article/view/27712disciplineepilepsysleepregimenantiepileptic drugs
spellingShingle D. Streckytė
R. Mameniškienė
Evaluation of sleep and treatment discipline in people with epilepsy
Neurologijos seminarai
discipline
epilepsy
sleep
regimen
antiepileptic drugs
title Evaluation of sleep and treatment discipline in people with epilepsy
title_full Evaluation of sleep and treatment discipline in people with epilepsy
title_fullStr Evaluation of sleep and treatment discipline in people with epilepsy
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of sleep and treatment discipline in people with epilepsy
title_short Evaluation of sleep and treatment discipline in people with epilepsy
title_sort evaluation of sleep and treatment discipline in people with epilepsy
topic discipline
epilepsy
sleep
regimen
antiepileptic drugs
url https://www.journals.vu.lt/neurologijos_seminarai/article/view/27712
work_keys_str_mv AT dstreckyte evaluationofsleepandtreatmentdisciplineinpeoplewithepilepsy
AT rmameniskiene evaluationofsleepandtreatmentdisciplineinpeoplewithepilepsy